In which I revisit old articles from Filmquisition and Unreality.
I’ll admit it. I was never really
a Fast and the Furious fan.
It’s not that there was ever anything wrong with the series, it’s
just that there was never anything there for me to get excited about. I
watched the first movie when it came out, was reasonably happy with it and
moved on.
It took Paul Walker’s tragic death for me to realize that there were
so damned many of those movies now. I never really paid any attention to
them before, so Vin Diesel spouting off in a trailer about family every couple
of years only made me vaguely aware that there were more than one of these.
Two or three I could understand, maybe four at a stretch, but seven?
What’s more is that it wasn’t some studio-driven behemoth franchise
that kept making money despite itself like Transformers or Pirates of the Caribbean. It was never “too big
to fail.” It’s Point Break with cars, and even the critics
seemed mostly behind the franchise by this point.
I kept hearing reports of fans
leaving the movie in tears. And this wasn’t just them crying – but
being reduced to heaving, blubbering messes. It wasn’t just men, wasn’t
just women, wasn’t even just fans that had been there from day one. This
was pretty much every single person who bought a ticket to see it.
And after seeing the tribute to Paul Walker at the end of the movie,
I totally get it. You knew that it was going to be there. It had to be there. You
could even pretty well guess exactly how they were going to do it, too.
But the thing was, once you saw it play out in front of you, it actually
was a monstrously emotional scene.
Now I’m not an especially emotional guy. I tear up at the end
of Schindler’s List,
but that’s pretty near it. But watching that last scene of Furious 7 really takes it out
of you: even if you haven’t seen a single one of the movies since the first
one.
It works because, in the end,
it’s not manipulation: it’s commemoration. It’s an emotionally honest
farewell to the man that had devoted the last fourteen years of his life
to the franchise. And when it’s over and the words “For Paul” hit the
screen, you know that that’s exactly what it means. And if a send-off
like that, divorced from seven films of continuity, can leave that kind of
an impact on me, maybe it’s about time for me to give the series another look.
So what do you think of the Fast and the Furious movies? Share your thoughts in the comment section below.
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